hahaha....
Vesicles enter the cis face of the Golgi apparatus, also known as the forming face or entry face. From there, they move through the Golgi stacks to the trans face, where they ultimately exit the Golgi apparatus.
Golgi apparatus ship or send vacuoles around the cells. The vacuoles are created in the E.R, where they go to the cis face of the apparatus, are processed, and leave on the trans face.
Lysosomes originate from the Golgi apparatus through a maturation process. They are formed by the fusion of vesicles containing hydrolytic enzymes with vesicles coming from the trans-Golgi network. This proximity allows for efficient packaging and transport of these enzymes to form functional lysosomes.
Cisternal maturation occurs in the Golgi apparatus, specifically in the cis-Golgi network. This process involves the gradual maturation and transformation of cis cisternae into trans cisternae, allowing for the processing and sorting of proteins within the Golgi apparatus.
Transport vesicles. Perhaps by motor proteins and entering the trans side of the Golgi.
The Golgi apparatus possesses a cis and trans side composed of cisternae. Proteins and lipids are modified and sorted as they move through these compartments, with the cis side receiving materials from the endoplasmic reticulum and the trans side shipping them out to their destinations.
Cis and trans faces form on the ends of the top layer on the Golgi apparatus. The cis face receives vesicles from the endoplasmic reticulum, while the trans face ships vesicles to their final destination within the cell or to the cell membrane.
The trans-Golgi cisternae are the compartments at the furthest end of the Golgi apparatus where proteins and lipids are sorted, processed, and packaged into vesicles for transport to their final destination. It is involved in modifying, sorting, and trafficking molecules within the cell.
That's the Golgi apparatus.
Substances packaged by the Golgi Apparatus can leave the cell within a vesicle. Vesicles of membrane lipids and proteins bud off from the trans-Golgi sacs of the Golgi Apparatus and are directed to their destination.Trans-Golgi sacs are sacs that are farthest away from the endoplasmic reticulum.
The condition is likely related to defective vesicle trafficking, particularly in the trans-Golgi network. Incubating cells at 20°C inhibits the proper sorting and transport of proteins within the Golgi apparatus. This can lead to a blockade in the release of proteins from the trans-Golgi and subsequent impairment in secretory pathways.
If you were a protein destined to reach the plasma membrane and you were making your way through the Golgi when suddenly Golgi trafficking was blocked at the trans face, what would happen to you?